2016 Monthly Open Space Reports
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79 Elm Street • Hartford, CT 06106-5127 www.ct.gov/deep Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity Employer Open Space Report to the Finance, Revenue and Bonding Committee and the State Bond Commission January 2016 Overview Section 22a-6v of the General Statutes of Connecticut requires the Commissioner of the Department of Energy & Environmental Protection to submit a report to the joint standing committee of the General Assembly having cognizance of matters relating to finance, revenue and bonding and to the State Bond Commission each month. The report provides information on the acquisition of land or interests in land by the state, a municipality, water company or nonprofit organization using funds authorized for the Open Space and Watershed Land Acquisition Program established under Sections 7-131d and the Recreation and Natural Heritage Trust Program established under Sections 23-73 to 23-79 of the Connecticut General Statutes. Open Space and Watershed Land Acquisition Grant Program The Open Space and Watershed Land Acquisition Grant Program provides grants to municipalities and private nonprofit land conservation organizations for the acquisition of open space land and to water companies to acquire land to be classified as Class I or Class II watershed land. The State of Connecticut receives a conservation and public access easement on property acquired to ensure that the property will be protected and available to residents of Connecticut as open space in perpetuity. The following grants were closed in January 2016. Additional information on these projects follows. Sponsor Project Acres Town of Colchester Moroch Property, Colchester 10.21 Town of Sprague Robinson Property, Franklin & Sprague 125.622 Moroch Property, Colchester Town of Colchester Fee Acquisition This 10.21 acre parcel will be added to the Ruby and Elizabeth Cohen Woodlands Park, a 2001 Open Space and Watershed Land Acquisition grant acquisition by the Town that protected 196 acres. The preservation of this parcel enhances the protection of the Deep River headwaters, a significant tributary to the Yantic River, which is part of the Thames River Basin and is vital to the ecosystem of the Dutton and MacDonald Swamps. Cohen Park is open to the public and provides passive recreational activities such as hiking, horseback riding, bike riding, mountain biking, wildlife observation and education, fishing and camping. 2 Robinson Property, Franklin & Sprague Town of Sprague Fee Acquisition This property, located primarily in Franklin, is adjacent to the 278 acre Mukluk Sportsmen’s Club Property (renamed the Sprague Land Preserve) and the 230 acre Watson Farm, both purchased with OSWA grant funds. This will grow the Sprague Preserve to over 600 acres of contiguous open space. With over a mile of frontage along the Shetucket River, the Sprauge Preserve provides public access for fishing, kayaking, birding and other water-related recreation. One of its most impressive natural features is the ridgeline of hemlock and pine that rises high above the banks of the Shetucket River. Its high bluffs along the river valley give rise to two significant waterfalls. The Sprague Land Preserve is an integral part of the Quinebaug-Shetucket Heritage Corridor and the Last Green Valley. Recreation and Natural Heritage Trust Program The Recreation and Natural Heritage Trust Program is the State of Connecticut’s primary program for the acquisition of lands for the beneficial use and enjoyment of the public as additions to the State’s system of parks, forests, wildlife, fisheries and natural resource management areas. The program acquires land that represents the ecological diversity of Connecticut, including natural features such as rivers, mountainous areas, coastal systems and their natural areas, in order to ensure the conservation of such land for recreational, scientific, educational, cultural and aesthetic purposes. There were no Recreation and Natural Heritage Trust Program acquisitions closed in January 2016. 3 79 Elm Street • Hartford, CT 06106-5127 www.ct.gov/deep Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity Employer Open Space Report to the Finance, Revenue and Bonding Committee and the State Bond Commission February 2016 Overview Section 22a-6v of the General Statutes of Connecticut requires the Commissioner of the Department of Energy & Environmental Protection to submit a report to the joint standing committee of the General Assembly having cognizance of matters relating to finance, revenue and bonding and to the State Bond Commission each month. The report provides information on the acquisition of land or interests in land by the state, a municipality, water company or nonprofit organization using funds authorized for the Open Space and Watershed Land Acquisition Program established under Sections 7-131d and the Recreation and Natural Heritage Trust Program established under Sections 23-73 to 23-79 of the Connecticut General Statutes. Open Space and Watershed Land Acquisition Grant Program The Open Space and Watershed Land Acquisition Grant Program provides grants to municipalities and private nonprofit land conservation organizations for the acquisition of open space land and to water companies to acquire land to be classified as Class I or Class II watershed land. The State of Connecticut receives a conservation and public access easement on property acquired to ensure that the property will be protected and available to residents of Connecticut as open space in perpetuity. The following grants were closed in February 2016. Additional information on these projects follows. Sponsor Project Acres South Central CT Reg. Water Authority Dandio Property , Guilford 60.81 Town of Berlin Chotkowski Property 71.1 Town of Westbrook Horse Hill Woods Phase II 185.84 Dandio Property, Guilford South Central Connecticut Regional Water Authority (RWA) Fee Acquisition This 60.81 acre parcel borders other RWA watershed land to the south and Guilford Land Trust easements to the north on Great Hill Road in Guilford. Most of the land is within the public water supply watershed of Lake Menunketuc Reservoir. Approximately 36 acres will become Class I land, approximately 23 acres will become Class II land and less than 2 acres is located off the public water supply watershed and will be considered Class III land. Unnamed watercourses and a tributary to Lake Menunketuc flow through this property. The RWA has a very active recreation program and will evaluate this property to determine if recreational uses will be permitted on the property, subject to Department of Public Health approvals. 2 Chotkowski Property Town of Berlin Fee Acquisition This 71.1 acre property, on the easterly side of the Chamberlain Highway, creates a 488 acre greenway with other Open Space and Watershed Land Acquisitions to the north (Bicentennial Park) and south (Girl Scout Property, Kensington Orchard and Hatchery Brook Conservation Area). This property contains former farmlands including hayfields and orchards and some wooded land. A hiking trail will provide direct access to this parcel and the Town recently approved a new parking lot at Kensington Orchard. The area is already extensively used for hiking, cross country skiing, birding, a community garden and other passive recreation uses. The Town of Berlin, various youth groups and the Connecticut Forest and Park Association have completed extensive restoration, trail blazing and bridge crossing projects, and is creating a new loop trail, which will connect to and become part of the Metacomet Trail, a nationally designated Scenic Trail. 3 Horse Hill Woods, Phase II Town of Westbrook Fee Acquisition This 185.54 acre acquisition (highlighted yellow above) is located in the State-designated Menunketesuck- Cockaponset Regional Greenway and contiguous to Horse Hill Woods Phase I (highlighted green), a previous Open Space and Watershed Land Acquisition (OSWA) grant. This trail hub, forest and wetland corridor extends further north into other sections of Cockaponset State Forest and east to the State’s 421 acre Messerschmidt Pond Wildlife Management Area. Southerly of this acquisition, efforts are on-going to link with Westbrook’s 83 acre Chapman Mill Pond Open Space (another OSWA grant) and the State’s recently acquired Sciongay property (west side of Chapman Mill Pond, Clinton). This property’s forest, wildlife and habitat resource values are high due to its location within a larger, unfragmented forest landscape and two structurally diverse wetland systems. The CT Audubon has determined that protection of these properties, adjacent to the Stewart B. McKinney National Fish and Wildlife Refuge Salt Meadow Unit (Refuge), and the undeveloped corridor between the Refuge & Cockaponset State Forest, ensures that the Refuge will continue to provide important habitat area for Saltmarsh sparrow, a CT threatened species, and protect the integrity of migratory flyways for many species. 4 Recreation and Natural Heritage Trust Program The Recreation and Natural Heritage Trust Program is the State of Connecticut’s primary program for the acquisition of lands for the beneficial use and enjoyment of the public as additions to the State’s system of parks, forests, wildlife, fisheries and natural resource management areas. The program acquires land that represents the ecological diversity of Connecticut, including natural features such as rivers, mountainous areas, coastal systems and their natural areas, in order to ensure the conservation of such land for recreational, scientific, educational,